Help:Signature

Contents

Signatures identify you as the author of a block of text. They should contain an automatic link to your user page, making it easy for others to learn more about you and communicate with you. The date contained in the signature also indicates how current the discussion is and the order in which comments were made.

Generally, your contributions to articles, help pages, policies, and other content pages should not be signed. Likewise it is not necessary to sign message wall posts, comments, or posts in the forums (with the exception of wiki-style forums), as these include your avatar, username, and time of post by default.

To do this, go to your Preferences (on any community) and check the I want to use wikitext in my signature checkbox. Then enter

[[User:Example|Example]] ([[User talk:Example|talk]])

in the Custom signature field above the checkbox.

You can add other customizations to this signature, such as colored text, a funny name, a small image, a special font, etc. by adding the appropriate wikitext to the signature box in your preferences.

Check with your community for whether there are any rules about styles in signatures.

Note: When you test your signature, keep in mind that a link to the current page will not be displayed as a clickable hyperlink. So the "link" to your talk page in your signature will not be clickable when placed on your own talk page.

Anonymous users and signatures

If you chose to edit on Fandom without logging in, but leave a signature, the tildes will be converted to your IP address. However, it can be easy to confuse two similar IPs in a conversation, so it may make more sense to manually sign your posts with a pseudonym or tag such as ―janedoe. Note that choosing not to sign with tildes does not keep your IP address private, since the IP still appears in the page history. If you wish for your address to be private, it is best to create an account.

Signatures in other character sets

If your signature is in a character set not in wide usage on the wiki where you are using a signature, it may be easier for users there to recognize you if you add a version of your name in the character set of that wiki.

In addition to difficulties users may have in remembering and using a name in a script which is foreign to them, characters from many scripts (such as Chinese, Hindi, or Georgian) may display as boxes or mojibake (garbage characters) for users without the proper fonts installed.

In these cases, you might want to add an additional nickname to your signature that is more understandable on that community. For example, you could use something like [[User:快樂|快樂 (Happiness)]] or [[User:快樂|快樂 (Felicidad)]] in the Custom signature field.

Dealing with unsigned messages

You can add {{unsigned|USERNAME}} or {{unsigned|USERNAME|~~~~~}} for a time stamp, replacing USERNAME with the username of the user who edited it, if a user did not sign their message.

More help

The English Wikipedia has various pages relating to signing comments, and to making comments in general, which may help to guide your project's development of signature and talk-page policies.